100 Fortrel, the fiber that means little or no ironing \ ... , j, ,,:) ,. y, W(; \J ill' >. .j/ ',-,,;J The charm of antique Wedgwood china patterns interpreted by Fabritique on broadcloth of Fortrel polyester aRd Avril rayon. Fortrel keeps pleats neat all day. By Dorothy Hubbs in beige,'blue, green/rust. blue/brown. 8-16. About $30. At B. Altman & Co., New York; Marshall Field & Company, Chicago; R. H. Stearns Company, Boston. Celanese @Fortrel@ is a trademark of Fiber Industries. Inc. e CONTEMPORARY FIBERS fifth of the Utah's decks were still visi- ble, the water washing up and down and across their rusted surfaces. "The bodies of fifty-eight Navy men who lost their lives aboard the Utah still remain in the battered hulk," the announcer said. The little boat rounded the northern tip of Ford Island, turned east, and then turned south, gliding almost noise- lessly now past hunks and chunks and pieces of other submerged vessels-bits of bulkhead, bits of deck, scraps of super- structures lying quietly in the water. There was rust and sea and memory in this strange graveyard, where the gro- tesque shapes of silent ships lay on their sides. "These ships didn't want to go down," said the announcer. The boat paused briefly alongside the Arizona, her fore and aft still showing, her mid- ships covered with a memorial concrete canopy. "The Arizona is still honored as an active ship by the Navy; she is still in commission, and the flag still flies aboard her, and her crew of eleven hundred and two men still sleep be- low," said the announcer. There was nothing for anybody aboard the tiny vessel to say, and nobody said anything. The vessel slid past the remains of the \Vest Virginia, the Tennessee, and \ the Oklahoma, and headed back into the , open sea, turning in the direction of I' \Vaikiki and the gleaming high-rise buildings. Children sat quietly along the upper deck, enjoying the Pacific breezes, and nobody said "Aloha." -PHILIP HAMBURGER . INFATUATION WITH SOUND OF OWN METAPHOR DEPARTMENT [From "The Shoes of the Fisherman," by Morris L. If'est] Leone lived up to his name. He had a white lion's mane and a growling temper. -Page 7. Leone threw back his great mane and laughed. -Page 8. Leone shook his lion's mane stubbornly. -Page 10. Leone nodded his lion's head in ap- proval. -Page 18. Leone rose in his place, tossed his white mane, and addressed the conclave. -Page 33. Cardinal Leone heaved his lion's bulk out of his chair, tossed his white mane, and addressed himself to the Pontiff. -Page 52. Abruptly Leone threw back his white mane and laughed. -Page 65. Cardinal Leone 'was still there, too, he of the white mane and the cold eye and the uncertain temper. -Page 143. Leone growled and tossed his white mane. -Page 155. Leone shook his white mane and lifted his old head in answer to the challenge. -P age. 354. .,7 ' "...... "j) '; <'; : ' ' ; :,., ! y:- , ; 'ri'.' '.: ..... , .:..- ";$ Ouibèwitching rabbit pin in;canary and whî1e diamonds has rl,lby eyesìIDd nose. $4;400. fed. tax included, Frp.rn a çollection desì.gned'by RAYMOND c. YARD, Inc. 680 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, N,y' SIXTEENTH FLOOR &flus/rated booklet on.ret:/ueÚ Treat your lips to luster and softness with Alexandra de Markoff's Lip Emollient Stick. Under, over, or without lipstick. $5. plus tax. {ifeKmzdw cæ Iíz ii, - " i { I , / ...:c .- ,'_ ...' J / W If J tU